Rotary system for submerged pumps

ABSTRACT

The rotary system ( 2 ), object of the present invention, is composed of a motoreducer assembly, which is coupled to a rotating shaft ( 5 ), through a pulley transmission system. At the lower part of the rotating shaft ( 5 ) the submerged pump ( 1 ) will be set.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present patent application deals with a system of floaters with rotary support for submerged pumps

HISTORY

Conventional submerged aerators and mixers, as they are also called submerged pumps, oxygenate liquids in a single direction and orientation, this way, they have a zone of action limited by the equipment's position of installation, where the referred zone of action is similar to a cone. It is in this zone where the largest concentration of oxygenation lies. As a consequence, in the vicinities of the submerged pump there will be incorporation zones of low oxygen mixture creating dead zones. Having in view this unidirectionality, there will be the need for an implementation of a greater number of equipments used in the treatment of effluents.

The current aerators and mixers need a well-planned installation layout so that the largest zone of action possible may occur.

This way the aerators and mixers currently available in the market do not permit a rotation of the previously mentioned flow orientation or zone of action. Now, the oxygenation index directly depends on the amount of time in which the air bubbles formed in the mixture stay in contact with the liquid under treatment and on the largest zone of action possible.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The patent presented here intends to solve the current problems of the state of the technique, by proposing a submerged pump (1) for oxygenation and mixture of liquids with the variation of the direction of the flow through a rotary system (2).

The invention will be better understood with the aid of the figures that accompany the present descriptive report, where:

FIG. 1 represents a lateral view of the submerged pump (1) where we can observe the location of the rotating shaft (5) and the zone of action (7);

FIG. 2 represents detail A, presented in FIG. 1, where we observe the rotary system (2) and the rotating shaft (5);

FIG. 3 represents a top view of the submerged pump (1) with rotary system (2), indicating the orientation of rotation (3) and the zone of action (7);

FIG. 4 represents a perspective view of the submerged pump (1) with the rotary system (2), indicating the orientation of rotation (3);

FIG. 5 represents a top view of a submerged pump (1) with the conventional system, where in the zone of action (7), we can observe the limited effective area of action;

FIG. 6 represents a top view of the submerged pump (1) with the rotary system (2), indicating the system's effective area of action, which represents its zone of action (7).

The rotary system (2), object of the present invention, is composed of a motoreducer assembly, which is coupled to a rotating shaft (5), through a pulley transmission system. At the lower part of the rotation shaft (5) the submerged pump (1) will be set.

At the time in which the motoreducer assembly of the rotary system (2) is activated, it causes the rotating shaft (5) to move. At the other end of the rotating shaft (5) the submerged pump (1) is coupled, which rotates in proportion to the movement of the rotating shaft (5). The submerged pump (1) through the rotary system (2) performs a rotation movement around the rotating shaft (5). This movement takes place through the rotary system (2) that is going to displace gradually the previously referred cone of action (7) generated by the rotor (propeller) of the submerged pump (1), as it can be seen in a comparison between FIGS. 5 and 6. The present invention permits the maximization of the zone of action (7) of the oxygenation/mixture flow, which will act in all directions, reducing the number of aerators and the final consumed power.

The zone of action (7) is maximized due to the rotary system (2), which as it rotates, it aerates its entire vicinity and mixing the aerated with non-aerated water.

With this 360° rotation that will be carried out by the rotating shaft (5) moving together with the submerged pump (1), the entire area around the system will be completely aerated/mixed, as the rotation of the submerged pump (1) assembly occurs, the entire water around it is going to be aerated and mixed.

As it can be observed in FIG. 6, the area of action is 12 times larger in the rotary system (2) in relation to the conventional system. An area using the rotary system (2) will use approximately 1 hour to generate a complete rotation (360°) of the submerged pump that will cover an area within an estimated radius of action of 30 m. This process of the rotary system (2), besides eliminating the number of application points of the submerged pumps (1), eliminates the so-called dead zones (non-aerated or mixed zones), this way there is an improved efficiency and quality.

It must be evident to the experts of the technique that the present invention can be configured from many other specific ways without moving away from the spirit or scope of the invention. Especially, it must be understood that the invention can be configured in the described ways. 

1. ROTARY SYSTEM FOR SUBMERGED PUMPS, characterized by the rotary aeration movement.
 2. ROTARY SYSTEM, in accordance with claim 1, characterized by the fact that it is composed of a motoreducer assembly (4), which is coupled to a rotating shaft (5), through a transmission system (pulleys) where the submerged pump (1) will be set at the lower part of the rotating shaft (5). 